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Clash of Exceptionalism in International Relations: Contemporary Dynamics and Impacts of US and China Exceptionalism on Global Affairs [Kõva köide]

Edited by (Universiti Malaya, Malaysia)
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Bakare presents a critical yet divergent views of American and Chinese exceptionalism that problematizes the contextual nexus between exceptionalism and soft power as a form of diplomacy. It also dissects the normative, structural, intellectual, and material content of American and Chinese exceptionalism to make sense of the regional and global implications of the two forms of exceptionalism.

The book provides a broad overview of American foreign policy, while exposing the embedded exceptionalism in its foreign policy and addresses the consequences of American exceptionalism vis-à-vis its foreign relations, such as in its US-India relations, US-Turkey relations, US-Africa relations, US-South America relations, US-Middle East relations, and its post-9/11 and War on Terror doctrine. It also takes an epistemological examination of the praxis of Chinese exceptionalism, assessing Chinas claim to global hegemony, Chinese soft power diplomacy, global developmental projects as form of its own exceptionalism. Hence, it also examines Chinese exceptionalism through the lens of Chinas relations with the rest of the world.

A timely and insightful read for scholars and researchers in International Relations, Global Studies, and Area Studies as well as students, think tanks, diplomats and international relations experts, who seek to have theoretical and empirical analysis on two variants competing American and Chinese exceptionalism.
Introduction Part I: Conceptual and Theoretical Foundations
1.
Individualism and Collectivism: Roots and Realities of U.S. and Chinese
Exceptionalism
2. The Evolution of Competing Exceptionalist Doctrines: A
Comparative Analysis of Manifest Destiny and the Community of Shared Future
in Shaping the Global Order Part II: American Exceptionalism Origins,
Manifestations, and Global Impact
3. Exceptionalism in American Foreign
Policy: Impact on IndoU.S. Relations
4. Post-9/11 U.S. Exceptionalism in the
War on Terror
5. American Exceptionalism, Double Orientalism, and the Iraq
and Afghanistan Wars
6. American Exceptionalism: Impact on the Middle East
7.
Manifestations of American Exceptionalism in Africa: Impact on the Continent
8. A Shining City Upon the Global Stage? U.S. Presidential Rhetoric and the
Display of American Exceptionalism at the United Nations (19892024)
9.
Internal Polarization, Anti-Multilateralism, and Anti-Americanism: Assessing
the Waning of U.S. Global Exceptionalism Part III: Chinese Exceptionalism
Narratives, Policies, and Regional Expressions
10. The Making of a Great
Power: Evaluating Chinas Ascent in the World-System
11. Exceptionalism and
China: Deconstructing Zhongguo Fangan as Chinese Solutions
12. Is China
exceptionally impacting Africa? Evidence from the continent
13.
Deconstructing Chinese Exceptionalism and Soft Power Diplomacy: A Case Study
of Southeast Asia
14. The Impact of Chinese Exceptionalism: A Critical
Analysis of China in Central Asia
15. Chinas BRI as a Manifestation of
Neo-Exceptionalism in the Global South Part IV: Comparative and Competitive
Exceptionalisms
16. Competing Exceptionalisms in Afghanistan: American,
Iranian, and Chinese Visions of Regional and Global Order
17. U.S. Policy
Toward Iran and the Clash of Exceptionalisms
18. Exceptionalism and the
Global South: U.S.China Rivalry and the Strategic Positioning of Pakistan in
a Transforming World Order
19. SinoU.S. Clash of Exceptionalisms:
Perspectives of Normative and Structural Competitions
20. Trump vs. Xi:
Exceptionalism and the Remaking of Global Order
21. Dual-Use Technologies and
Strategic Decoupling: Techno-Nationalism as the New Face of Exceptionalism
22. The Rise of Chinese-Style Multilateralism: Transforming Global Governance
Structures and Practices
Najimdeen Bakare is Associate Professor at the Department of International and Strategic Studies, Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences, University of Malaya, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.